Polymarket, the popular prediction market, has been doing really well lately. In fact, it’s been doing so well that Bloomberg is out with a new story that claims the site’s founder, Shayne Coplan, is officially America’s youngest “self-made billionaire,†a term which is quite confusing.
To review, Coplan’s newfound riches are the result of a recent business deal with the owner of the New York Stock Exchange, who has promised to invest billions in the 27-year-old’s company. As such, Coplan has managed to become Silicon Valley’s latest success story, and he is now worthy of a write-up about his supposedly meritocratic rise to fame and fortune. Indeed, Bloomberg’s story, which includes the typical hagiographical details, charts Coplan’s rise from his modest beginnings in a Manhattan apartment building:
A couple of years after dropping out of New York University with dreams of making it big in crypto, Shayne Coplan was so broke that he took an inventory of his Lower East Side apartment so that he could sell belongings to make rent.
“This is too good of an idea to just exist in whitepapers,†he recalled thinking in a later post on X. Then Covid struck — the perfect time to develop an app for stuck-at-home folks to bet on real-world outcomes, he reasoned. He began building Polymarket from his bathroom and launched the platform in June 2020.
…he and his company are now riding high after Intercontinental Exchange Inc., the owner of the New York Stock Exchange, said it would invest as much as $2 billion in Polymarket at an $8 billion pre-money valuation. That deal makes its 27-year-old founder the youngest self-made billionaire tracked by the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
At any rate, whatever Coplan’s official financial ranking and its appropriate designation, the clear takeaway here is that Polymarket is enjoying a comeback, and Coplan is reaping the benefits of it.
Polymarket obviously needed a comeback because, in 2022, the Commodities Futures Trading Commission accused the site of having offered illegal trading services, and, for two years after that, as part of its settlement with the government, the site was forced to promise that it would not operate inside the U.S. In 2023, despite these promises, the CFTC opened a new probe into the platform. Then, in 2024, Coplan’s apartment was raided by the FBI. Later, it was reported that the DOJ had opened its own investigation into the site.
Ever since Trump returned to office, Polymarket has fared significantly better. In July, Bloomberg reported that the administration had ended both probes into the prediction platform. Not long afterward, Polymarket announced its victorious return to the U.S. as part of a deal to acquire a derivatives exchange and a clearinghouse. In June, the company had also announced a partnership with Elon Musk’s X (formerly Twitter), which Coplan said would allow his platform to “provide contextualized, data-driven insights to millions of Polymarket users around the world instantaneously.â€
Would Coplan have ever been a billionaire if not for one Donald J. Trump? We’ll never truly know.
Original Source: https://gizmodo.com/is-the-founder-of-polymarket-really-the-youngest-self-made-billionaire-2000669910
Original Source: https://gizmodo.com/is-the-founder-of-polymarket-really-the-youngest-self-made-billionaire-2000669910
Disclaimer: This article is a reblogged/syndicated piece from a third-party news source. Content is provided for informational purposes only. For the most up-to-date and complete information, please visit the original source. Digital Ground Media does not claim ownership of third-party content and is not responsible for its accuracy or completeness.